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In rabbits, black skin (B) is dominant over brown skin (b), and short hair (S) is dominant over long hair (s). All F1​ offsprings are heterozygous black-short haired. F1​ male crossed with F1​ female. In F2​ generation, what is the percentage of homozygous black-short haired offspring?
A)50%
B)12.5%
C)6.25%
D)18.75%

Answer
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Hint: Dominant refers to the interaction of a gene's two copies. Individuals obtain from each parent two copies of each chromosome, known as alleles. One allele would be expressed if the alleles of a gene are different; it is the dominant gene. The other allele's influence, called recessive, is masked.

Complete answer:
The alleles of one gene segregate independently from the alleles of another gene, according to Mendel's law of separate assortment. The skin color alleles [B and b] would then segregate separately from the hair length alleles [S and s], resulting in the development of four forms of gametes by heterozygous dominant parent plants. The phenotypic proportion of 9:3:3:1 is provided by the combination of these gametes. For 9/16 plants with both dominant phenotypes, only one plant is homozygous dominant, so 1/16*100 = 6.25 percent is the proportion of homozygous black short haired offspring.

F1​ generation: BbSs X BbSs


GametesBSBsbSBs
BSBBSS       BBSs    BbSS   BbSs
Bs BBSs BBss BbSs Bbss
bSBbSSBbSs bbSS bbSs
bsBbSs Bbss bbSs bbss


Hence, the correct answer is option (C)

Note: A dihybrid cross identifies a mating experiment with two features of two species that are identically hybrid. A hybrid organism is a heterozygous organism, which suggests that at a certain genetic location, or locus, it bears two distinct alleles.